When I was 13 years old, I had a calendar hanging in my bedroom in which every month featured a different picture of Aragorn from Lord of the Rings. In fact, I wildly credit Viggo Mortensen in that movie for first making me aware of my sexuality. I was so wholly obsessed with the books and the movies that, to this day, whenever I hear anything about J.R.R. Tolkien’s books or Peter Jackson’s movie adaptation of the LOTR trilogy, I feel a familiar stirring in my heart (and my loins — okay, mostly my loins).

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But enough about me and my womanly urges as they relate to a beloved fantasy series, and more about news related to said beloved fantasy series! Actor Dominic Monaghan, who played lesser hobbit Merry in the LOTR, is now the host of a nature show on Travel Channel called Wild Things with Dominic Monaghan. He is also, apparently, a male jewelry enthusiast.

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(Photo: Noel Vasquez/Getty Images)

In a recent interview with The Huffington Post, Monaghan shared a story about auditioning for Lord of the Rings and seeing none other than David Bowie reading for a part in the movie.

"I was at the Hubbard's, which is a pretty notorious casting agency office in London, doing an audition for 'Lord of the Rings,' and when it ended I went over and talked to John Hubbard, who was running the audition, and he said, 'Hey, it went really well. You should wait around for 5 or 10 mins. We'll give you some feedback," He continued, "I thought, 'Oh, OK, cool, and I sat in the reception office. As I was reading a magazine waiting, David Bowie came in and signed his little list and went in. And I'm assuming he read for Gandalf. I can't think of anything else he would've read for. He may have read for something else, but I'm a huge David Bowie fan, and I was lucky enough to know his son now so just seeing him in person was pretty special to me."

However, rumors have been floating around that Bowie wasn’t reading for Gandalf, but for the role of the elf Elrond, son of Eärendil and Elwing, great-grandson of Lúthien, and Lord of Rivendell. Hugo Weaving eventually got the part and played it spectacularly, but Bowie had such an otherworldly vibe that it’s not surprising that he may have auditioned for it; he was supposedly turned down for being too famous for the role. Which is probably for the best, as my teenage brain would've exploded at that possibility.